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Texting and Teachers Experimenting with Technology: 10 Resources

Part of the series: Teacher Development Reflections

Texting with refugeesIn a previous post, I mentioned how I was teaching refugees in Athens, Greece as part of my CELTA certification training. Luckily! I received my CELTA certification! Thanks again to my tutor, Marisa Constantinides. Marisa runs the CELTA center and encourages the educators taking the course to effectively integrate technology in their lesson plans.

For many educators, technology tools can be daunting. In my CELTA course, most of the educators were very new to technology. However, the teachers I worked with had a great attitude towards the technology. It isn’t that they embraced it with wide open arms. They recognized their time constraints. What I really admired is how many tried in their lessons to integrate different technologies when it wasn’t a requirement. They tried something new they admitted they feared. They were digital immigrants with very little technology experience in some cases, yet, they ventured forth and I admired them for their bravery.

Texting with Refugees

One example that really amazed me was when one of my colleagues taught our beginners how to create text messages in English. The topic was Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) which might seem tough to teach to our group of beginners. Our beginner group consisted of several refugee students who lacked reading and writing skills as well as English skills. They had struggles in their daily life with work, affording clothes, to eat, and so forth. Towards the end of the lesson, my colleague asked the students to raise their hands if they had a cellphone. Surprisingly, the majority did. I can only imagine that many people see cellphones as a staple.

Barriers That Chain Us to Our Comfort Zones

Sometimes, I think we imagine the barriers that prevent us from trying innovative practices are much bigger than they really are. During #EDChat, many educators often say they don’t try using technology due to equal access. Unfortunately, every student in the world will never have every resource we want to use. Schools just don’t work that way. The teacher in this case didn’t worry about the students not having the technology. Instead, she encouraged them to share resources. We worked with refugees who hardly have shelter and food but they shared the resources and enjoyed the lesson. When the teacher asked them if they owned computers at home, some replied they access the Internet at cafes. I think that many learners in the world do access the Internet at cafes, public libraries, or community centers. Lack of resources should never be an excuse when students can learn to collaborate and share the resources they do have. In my class of 10 we often share technology. We share one Iphone, one Macbook, and a few audio recording devices. The children learn how to collaborate and I have learned how to manage a small amount of resources. Each one has a role and I love having stations where they can use the various technology at the same time and I facilitate the learning. We don’t need 10 separate computers or Iphones. I think we should keep trying to find ways to implement the effective use of technology. We can all gain access to a few computers for students to share. Most students want to bring their laptops, smartphones, Ipods, and cellphones to school. We can all assign them roles and teach them how to collaborate and problem solve in groups using the technology.

Why Teach with ICTs?

Our students already enter a workforce in which they receive ICTs (Information and Communication Technologies) to communicate with colleagues worldwide, yet many never have been trained to do this effectively. This will become more necessary in the future and we cannot prevent or change this. Change and the continuous advances in this technology revolution are constants. We may long for technologies of the past or a world of the past, but we cannot teach our students to live in this world we want. I hear from adults daily that text messaging ruins students writing or how students should play outside more instead of being on the computer or stuck to their video games. Yes, we can make our students aware of this but not teaching them how to effectively use the tools of their world means we aren’t doing our job. We aren’t preparing them for their world. We have to teach students to live in the world they will need to make responsible decisions.

I think many of the problems with the world are because schools don’t teach these important skills. They are stuck in teaching effective bubble test marking but when do we teach students about digital citizenship, ethics, collaborating worldwide, and applying their learning to finding worldwide solutions? We have wars due to the lack of ineffective communication worldwide. We have countries who treat immigrants and foreigners terribly because students hardly ever communicate with students worldwide. We have problems agreeing on an effective worldwide policy to save the environment because our world leaders cannot agree. Without this collaboration in schools, students continue to hold their stereotypes and misconceptions of others. We are raising students worldwide who only care about their own problems and are stuck in their own microcosms. They hold steadfastly to their beliefs and can’t understand another culture’s beliefs, religion, traditions, or way of life. They won’t even tolerate them. Do we really want to continue to be part of this problem or do we want to be part of the solution?

10 Texting Resources

  • Watch the video, which prevents both sides of the argument for students using cellphones in schools. Most students have cellphones so we can begin helping students collaborate and communicate with them. Here are a few more resources to help you along the way:

Challenge:

Find a way to get your students using ICTs to collaborate and problem solve!

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Mobile Motivation: 17 Digital Storytelling & Literacy Apps/Resources for Kids

Part of the Cool Sites series

I teach young English language learners between 5 to 10 years-old. I have found my Iphone as one of the best tools to help improve their English and motivate them to speak English outside the classroom! We do so much with my Iphone such as search for images to explain words they don’t know, search for information, create videos of our favorite songs and games, record ourselves speaking English, and learn English through various apps!

However, these apps are not specific to English language learners. These apps help kids to read, create digital stories, interact with reading materials, improve their reading skills, increase their vocabulary, improve their grammar, and reproduce the knowledge they have learned. These apps involve kids in the story so they have fun while reading! For my young learners this is especially important because they often struggle with the reading vocabulary and meaning, since they are acquiring the language. Reading books in English can be very stressful for them. We still read aloud with various visual and support materials but when possible we also listen to stories on my Iphone! My kids never get to create or read stories with an iPhone except for in my class so this is a real treat.

Free Apps for Kids

These are some of the great free apps we will be trying this year to get them creating their own stories, listening to stories, increasing their reading skills, and improving their English proficiency. These are available on the Ipod Touch and Ipad as well but may not be free on those platforms.

  • Talking Tom- Kids talk to Tom and he repeats everything said with a funny voice, pet him to make him purr, pour a glass of milk for him, and poke his head, belly or feet, grab his tail. The best part is that within seconds what the students say to Tom is recorded as an avi video which can be uploaded to YouTube and Facebook or sent by email. This app really gets young learners speaking English!
  • StoryKit- Create an electronic storybook by drawing on the screen, uploading images, recording sound effects and voice, laying out the elements of the story (text boxes, images, and sound clips) freely by dragging them or pinching to resize, reordering pages, and uploading to the StoryKit web server. Email a link to the story. The application includes four public domain children’s books to rewrite and rearrange into a new story.
  • Fotobabble- Quickly create and easily share talking photos in 3 steps (Snap or select or a photo, speak into the microphone to record audio, share with friends via email, Facebook or Twitter).
  • StoryCorps-Listen to the weekly story; share stories via email, Facebook, and Twitter; get tips for recording stories on mobile devices; create and email a list of questions for an interview with StoryCorps.
  • Read Me Stories- Children’s books- A new talking picture book everyday teaches children new concepts, new words and how to say them. Free limited time trial. Keeps track of favorite books to read again and purchase from Amazon.com.
  • K12 Timed Reading Practice Lite- 25 short, engaging stories for K-4 readers, variety of fiction and non-fiction, 10 Flesh-Kincade reading levels, view recommendations for moving up or down in reading difficulty based on recorded Words per Minute scores, and track one reader’s stories read, words per minute, percent above or below average reading rates, and what’s next on the reading list.
  • Library Of Congress – Virtual Tour for iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad- Includes highlights of exhibitions and architectural features, with photos, audio by curators and other experts, links to more detailed online exhibitions, and even a video about the history of Thomas Jefferson’s Library.
  • Puppet Animation Lite- Kids animate uploaded images or sample puppets; animate them by choosing swing, elastic, or scaling; save as an animated gif to send via email or Twitter.
  • Kids Apps: 13 in 1- 13 different applications ranging from math games, over 600 flash cards, interactive tracing drills, ABCs, counting, vocabulary, number and letter tracing, Math Whiz quiz, music instruments vocabulary, house words and pictures, and more.
  • Animoto- Upload images, choose a soundtrack from the library, and click a button to make a 30-second video. Sync your videos with your Animoto.com account, download videos for offline viewing, and make longer ones with an All-Access Pass.
  • Chicktionary Lite- The chickens head bobs and clucks when kids use one of their letters to make a word. The “beak sneak” option fills in one letter from each of the words not yet found. Has 12 levels.
  • Tales2Go- Free for 30 days. Instant, on-demand and unlimited access to over 1,200 stories from leading audio publishers and storytellers.

Free Apps for Kids

Here’s a student interview about using mobile devices for learning:

Challenge:

Try these apps with your students and blog about any exciting ways you use them!

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What apps do you love using with your students?

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Students, Ownership, & Creativity: 35 Resources

Part of the Cool Sites series

My students love creating! They are young learners, but when I worked with high school students they also loved hands-on, creative projects. I include as many as possible, because these presentations show me what my students are passionate about. I’m always wowed by them. Presentations and projects also help the teacher assess their students better than any bubble test could!

With digital technologies, Internet tools, and Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs), educators have easy and quick ways to add presentations as part of the curriculum. These tools motivate students to learn, share, and develop presentation and collaboration skills needed in their future careers. Teaching them how to do this now means we are preparing them for their future effectively! Rarely will a student have to fill out a bubble test for their careers, but trust me many will have to prepare presentations, brainstorm ideas, be creative, and collaborate on teams through ICTs.

Top Sites to Get Students to Create

These are my favorites tools you can use to get your students presenting! Included is a brief description and helpful links to facilitate using these tools more effectively in the classroom. I have also included the links to the free educator accounts for each of these sites.

  • Prezi-the alternative to PowerPoint. Create non-linear presentations with images, text, video, and cool transitions.

  • Google Tools for Educators- Students collaborate in real time to create slideshows, drawings, documents, and more that are on the web and can easily be embedded. Google has numerous free apps that make collaboration and creation easy!
  • VoiceThread- Integrate slides, drawings, videos, and images. People can leave comments in a variety of formats. See these resources for examples.
  • Glogster- An interactive and multimedia poster.
  • Zoho Shows- Similar to Google apps, but you also have great drag and drop features! Very useful alternative if you can’t get Google apps in your school. Includes pre-built themes, clipart and shapes.
  • Animoto- Make videos with creative common images and audio. Upload your own images, video clips, and audios.
  • Empressr-Upload video, images and audio to create cool slideshows with impressive effects. Use the charting and table tools, import images from Flickr, embed your presentation on your blog, and create a backchannel with Twitter during your presentation.
  • Masher- Create a video by mixing video clips, music tracks, and images. These can be from your own library or choose from a huge library of audio, video, and music content, which are free to use. Easily embed it in your blog.
  • PhotoPeach-  Slideshows and quizzes with music that embed on your websites or blogs.
  • JayCut- This exciting video editor launches the full features in February. However, this is really impressive online video editor that you can play with here. Online you can upload images, audio, and video clips. Add transitions, effects, and more. Easily collaborate with others on the same video. You can also edit videos on your smartphone.
  • Vuvox-Choose from 3 different types of effective presentations- express, collage, or studio. Upload your own video clips, photos, and music and add incredible effects. You can embed this in your blog.
  • Stupeflix-Mix images, videos, and soundtracks. Add titles, transitions, and themes. There is no library of free music but you can easily embed it. See this great example.
  • Capzles-make an impressive presentation with your videos, images, and music. Moreover, blog about the experience which goes on a horizontal timeline. Also has a free app for your mobile phone!
  • Magnoto- A mix between Wallwisher and Glogster. Display your photos, videos, text and audio in unique ways on a cool background. You have the freedom to move the parts around. People can comment on the different pages and subscribe to them.
  • Scrapblog-Create multimedia scrapbooks. Upload your images and play with the themes, stickers, backgrounds, text features, and frames. Embed this in your blog.
  • Mixbook- Collaborate on a photobook with friends. Create stories, photo journals, and more with your uploaded images. You can zoom in on photos, add backgrounds, and embed this in a blog.
  • Ahead- Works like Prezi. This is an online platform for dynamic presentations. Upload videos, audio, images, pdfs, and Word documents. You can embed this.
  • Yodio- Add narration to slideshows easily through your computer or by using your phone. Embed this easily in your blog.
  • PanRaven- Create digital stories with your uploaded videos, music, and images. The site has photo editing tools and lets you embed the presentation on your blog.
  • Slideshare- Upload your PowerPoint presentations, Word documents and pdfs to embed in your blog. You can narrate your presentation.
  • Authorstream- Upload your PowerPoint presentations to embed in your blog. You can narrate your presentation and play it as a video.

More Resources

Challenge:

Try getting your students to publish their work online and invite other students to comment and share their work with your class.

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What presentation tools do you love?

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Learning Beyond Walls: 21 Skype Resources

Part of the Cool Sites series

Skyping with Emma
Image courtesy of @teflpet.

In the picture above you can see a great friend of mine, Emma Herrod, and her son who have video-conferenced with my classes and workshops. When the teachers in my last workshop interviewed Emma via Skype about our interaction through Skype they were excited about technology. Most of the teachers had been reluctant towards technology but Skype is one of those fantastic free tools that gets teachers new to technology motivated to try the technology. For this reason, I love to show teachers and administrators Skype. Skype is one of the top tools I introduce to teachers, administrators, and my students. This tool has tremendous learning potential, is free, easy to use, and has incredible buy-in.

I have been fortunate to have people in my Skype network who will Skype with me at the spur of the moment or make themselves available for my various classes in Germany. This year I have been fortunate to Skype in the following ways:

  • Emma and her son Skyped my class of 5 year-olds. Her son taught my young language learners how to make an origami box.
  • Emma also Skyped my adult learners to answer their questions about the UK elections and to teach them British idioms.
  • Steven Anderson has Skyped my administrators, teachers I’ve trained, and adult classes. Topics usually include what makes a great Skype lesson and the ideas for integrating Skype in schools.
  • Matthew Farber‘s sixth grade class Skyped my adult class and answered questions about the differences between Germany and the US.
  • Candace Townsley‘s sixth grade class Skyped middle school students, my director, and toddlers about the Wild West.
  • I have Skyped with several educators to train them online or their staff. Please feel free to ask me to Skype with your staff! I love doing this!

In the process of training teachers to integrate Skype effectively with their classes and using Skype to get my German students to interact with students worldwide, I have found several incredible resources. Feel free to share these resources with other teachers. Consider showing Skype to teachers taking the first steps with technology and who may be very reluctant to try integrating technology in their classrooms.

Skype in Education

Technology 4 Kids Wiki: Skype Resources
Using Skype at School (The Dummies Series)
Skype in School Wiki
50 Ways to Use Skype in the Classroom
Student Inter-school Debating with Skype by Lois Smethurst
Giving Students Skype Jobs by Langwitches
Skype an Author Wiki
10 Ways to Use Skype in the Classroom
Motivating Adult Learners: Skype an Expert

Finding Classes to Skype

List of Classrooms Ready to Skype
Want Ads by Classes Wanting to Skype for Specific Project
Skype Other Classrooms- List by Sue Waters
EPals Global Community

Recording Skype Sessions

Automatically Recording Skype Calls with MP3 Skype
15 Apps for Recording Skype
Using PowerGramo

More Resources

Improving Skype Calls by Sue Wyatt
How to Produce Video Interviews for Your Blog With Skype
Using VuRoom to Hold A Skype Conference
Make group video calls with up to 10 people with the new beta version of Skype for Windows

Langwitches Presentation: Around the World with Skype

One of the best Skype webinars I have seen! Silvia Rosenthal Tolisano’s Presentation, Around the World with Skype!

Challenge:

Try any of these resources and blog about your experience. Blogging helps you reflect and decide how you can apply this learning to improve your instructional methods.

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What are your ideas for integrating Skype into the classroom?

Learning Beyond Walls- Games and Wikis!

Part of the Cool Sites series

Many of you have started school already and are integrating new technology in your curriculum. Wikis are one of my favorite tools for encouraging learning beyond the classroom walls. I’m sharing with you this post I originally wrote for one of my favorite blogs, ELT Digital Play, back in May. I hope you find the tips useful when creating your class wiki!

Extending Learning Beyond the Classroom Walls

Did you know that the average time spent playing video games per week is 18 hours? Imagine if your students spent 18 hours a week practicing their English or studying your subject voluntarily. Perhaps, you won’t be able to persuade your students to practice English for this amount of time, but you can get them to practice their English outside the classroom in a fun way! Many of the free games online are fantastic for language learning. My class time is highly focused on having students speak English, therefore, we rarely spend a lot of class time playing online games. Instead, the games are put on my class wiki for students and parents to enjoy at home. These games are optional, but I find that most of the children will play them at home with their parents guidance.

So what do you put in a wiki?

A wiki is like a class website, but easier to design. Wikis are free for educators and are advertisement free if you sign-up at Wikispaces for Educators or PBWorks for Educators. Both of these sites provide you with a variety of tools to embed (insert on your wiki page) to help students collaborate and build a language learning community full of resources. Below are some ideas to consider:

  • Have a translation button to help students and parents understand the website
  • Use video tutorials like the one below to help students and parents navigate the wiki

  • List the vocabulary and grammar the students are supposed to learn with each game
  • Conduct a parent workshop to teach parents how to help their children play the games and reinforce the language at home
  • Supplement the games with related songs, stories, finger plays, activities and/or videos
  • In the English Story Time wiki, I list an English story the student can read that relates to the theme in the game.
  • Have students use other web 2.0 tools to provide support and excitement for the game
  • Have students design their game characters using the Voki website or upload drawings of their characters in Blabberize
  • Have students write reviews of each game and how they believe the gaming experience can be improved. Encourage the students to share this with the game designer, because they will be motivated if the game designer responds.

Adding the “social” to game-based learning…

Have you watched anyone recently play a game on their Wii or PS3? You will notice that these games have virtual worlds and that players can speak through headsets to other players that are located in another part of the world. Several of our students already play these games and they enjoy them, because they get to compete with others, complete tasks with others, and interact with others. Language is learned through social interaction so it is important to add this dimension to the games we choose for our language learners to play. Wikis are great tools for adding the social networking aspect to your game-based curriculum.

  • Embed a Wallwisher so students can easily add in gaming tips
  • Embed a Google Doc where students add tips and tricks to pass certain games stages.
  • Embed a forum where students can discuss game strategies. Wikispaces comes with a discussion page.
  • Have students create graphs and charts on your computer’s software and post them on the wiki. These graphs can chart their progress on their games like how much time they took to complete a level.
    • These graphs add a competitive edge as students compete to raise their rankings.

Useful links:

“If the child is not learning the way you are teaching, then you must teach in the way the child learns” - Rita Dunn

Challenge:

Try integrating wikis or games into course content to motivate students to learn beyond the school walls.

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